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Note that hands-on use of the HTRC portal and its tools requires a logon.  Please see the information linked from the section titled "The portal", below.  Those wishing to experience the tools using a collection of scholarly interest may want to construct such a collection following the tutorial referred to under the section called "Workset builder".

 

What is HathiTrust (HT)?

  • a consortium - international partnership of over 100 institutions.
  • a digital library containing about 13.5 million books, ~5 million (38%) of which are viewable in full online. All items are fully indexed, allowing for full text search within all volumes. You can login with your Cornell NetID to

    • create Collections (public or private)
    • download PDF’s of any item available in full text
  • a trustworthy preservation repository providing long-term stewardship, redundant robust backup, continuous monitoring, and persistent identifiers for all content.

Why aren't all books viewable online?

Computational analysis must address the very real challenges of what can and cannot be legally shared digitally, so it helps to understand the realities that affect full-text viewability.  Not all books in HathiTrust are viewable in full, although all are indexed in full.  Viewability is determined by many factors, including copyright law (both US and International) and stipulations of the rights-holders (authors and/or publishers) and digitizing agents (like Google).  There are two attributes assigned that affect viewability.  The first is an attribute that describes a complex set of factors relating to copyright, digitizing agents and rights-holders, referred to as "rights" metadata.  The second attribute is a binary value ("allow/deny") often referred to as "access" metadata.  In cases where a volume has no factors attached to it that would limit sharing, both attributes would express this.  Colloquially, the set of these volumes are referred to as the "open-open"  set.  HTRC development is commonly done in the open-open set. 

What is the HathiTrust Research Center (HTRC)?

  • a collaborative research center (jointly managed by Indiana University and the University of Illinois) dedicated to developing cutting-edge software tools and cyberinfrastructure that enable advanced computational access to large amounts of digital text. Let's unpack this:
    • "computational access" - computational analysis, algorithmic analysis, distant reading, text-mining
    • "cyberinfrastructure" - Data to Insight Center at University of Indiana: supercomputers, data warehouse, SOLR
    • "large amounts" - "at scale", the bigger the better (more signal, less noise)
    • "cutting edge" - experimental by nature, things can break, things are unfinished/in-development; see the DSPS blog post on HTRC Uncamp 2015  for most recent developments
  • intended to serve and build community for scholars interested in text analysis; join user group mailing list (send an email to htrc-usergroup-l-subscribe@list.indiana.edu)

What specific services does the HTRC offer scholars?

Documentation of offerings on the HTRC User Community Wiki - links to services, user support documentation, meeting notes, elist addresses and sign-up information, and FAQs.

The "portal"

  • "SHARC" branding in URL (Secure HathiTrust Analytical Research Commons) - eventually all services will be accessed through the portal.
  • access to tools depends on login; see the Portal & Workset Builder Tutorial for v3.0, "Sign up for an account, and sign in" for details

Workset builder

  • allows researchers to create a set of text to analyze algorithmically, see  Portal & Workset Builder Tutorial for v3.0,  "Create Workset" for tutorial
  • linked from the portal, but also at https://sharc.hathitrust.org/blacklight
  • really, really helps to use in a second window and operate the portal in the first
  • worksets can be private (open to your own use and management) or public (viewable by all logged-in HTRC users, management restricted to owner)

Algorithms

  • allows researchers to run ready to use algorithms against specific collections, see  Portal & Workset Builder Tutorial for v3.0, "Create Workset" for tutorial
  • many algorithms provided, others can be added by scholars' request as time permits development
  • workshop dedicated to these alone (ask and I can give you a tour)
  • handout available

Data Capsule

  • allows researchers to create a virtual machine environment, configure with tools, and analyze texts, see  Portal & Workset Builder Tutorial for v3.0, "Use the HTRC Data Capsule" for details
  • requires a VNC application for your browser, like VNC View for Google Chrome
  • designed to be a secure analytical environment that respects access restrictions to text while allowing for computational analysis; maintenance mode / secure mode
  • not yet tied to worksets
  • currently restricted to "open-open" (non-restricted) corpus; eventual objective is to allow for access to full HT corpus

Extracted Features dataset

  • A brief single page attachment describing the motivations and potential of the data set.
  • page level attributes (volume level and page level data) for all books in HT; rationale and features explained 
  • can download full dataset via rsync (Watch out! BIG! 4TB!)
  • details on leveraging the dataset to select data using a workset and the EF_Rsync_Script_Generator algorithm to download data for just that set.
  • David Mimno's "word similarity tool" is built from the full Extracted Feature dataset

Bookworm

  • open source project, same basic functionality as Google nGram Viewer, although graphically faceted
  • base data is currently "open-open" data; working on legal aspects required for base data to shift to entire HT corpus, regardless of viewability.
  • plans and allocated grant to develop tie-in to worksets
  • see wiki for tutorial

 

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